71 Pa. Super. 109 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
The appellant was convicted in the court below of perjury, charged to have been committed at the trial, in the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Lackawanna County, of one Anthony Malinaro for the murder of Alfred Viola also known as Jim Malvase. The alleged perjury consisted of the testimony of the appellant that he had a conversation with Viola, the deceased, shortly after the latter had been wounded and was in a buggy in front of Rizzo’s hotel, that appellant, addressing the wounded man, said “What is the matter with you, Jim?” and that Viola replied, using a vile epithet, “He shoot me with my own arm.”
Testimony may be material, and properly assigned for perjury, either where it tends to directly prove or disprove one side or the other in the main issue, or where under the established rules of evidence it indirectly tends to do so by crediting or discrediting other evidence or the testimony of another witness. In some cases the materiality may be determined by reference to the pleadings without regard to the testimony, in others, the testimony given being upon some secondary issue of fact arising on the trial in the case, its materiality can only be determined by an examination of the other testimony which it is intended to corroborate or contradict: Commonwealth v. Stern, 58 Pa. Superior Ct. 591; Commonwealth v. Bobanic, 62 Pa. Superior Ct. 40. Malinaro was upon trial for murder. He entered the general plea of not guilty, but under that plea the mere question of whether he had killed Viola was not necessarily the only
The first question which the learned counsel for the appellant states to be involved in this case is the relevancy of the testimony of eyewitnesses to the killing of Viola by Malinaro upon the trial of this appellant for perjury. The conversation with Viola to which this appellant testified at the murder trial was by him alleged to have occurred very shortly after Viola had received his mortal wound, it was admissible for the reason that it was of the res gestae and for the additional reason that the testimony of this appellant disclosed that Viola then
Careful examination of the testimony has led us to the conclusion that it was sufficient to sustain the conviction. The appellant had testified that the buggy was standing in the street in front of Rizzo’s hotel. The testimony of Thomas McCue, who testified that he stopped the buggy, in which John Davis had the wounded man and took the wounded man from the buggy and placed him in an automobile, would have warranted a finding that the wounded man had no conversation with anybody after the buggy stopped, he testified positively that such a thing could not have occurred, that the wounded man was moaning and spoke to no person. It is true that he said there were a number of men around the buggy as it was approaching him, and that he could not say what
Tbe charge of tbe court fairly presented to tbe consideration of tbe jury tbe questions upon which they were required to pass, tbe principles of law were correctly stated and tbe references to tbe testimony were free from bias. Tbe suggestion that the charge was inadequate is not well founded.
Tbe judgment is affirmed and it is ordered that tbe appellant appear in tbe court below at such time as be may be there called and that be be committed until he has complied with tbe sentence or any part thereof that was not performed at tbe time this appeal was made a supersedeas.